Las Vegas Review-Journal

Be cautious with zero-premium Medicare Advantage plans

- By Tom Murphy

Health insurers will flood the Medicare Advantage market again this fall with enticing offers for plans that have no monthly price tag.

The number of so-called zero-premium plans has been growing for years, and they can appeal to retirees who live on fixed incomes. Experts say shoppers should exercise caution, because they might find better coverage at a relatively small monthly cost.

Medicare Advantage plans are privately run versions of the government’s Medicare program for people who are age 65 and older or have certain disabiliti­es. The annual enrollment window for 2023 Medicare Advantage coverage opens next week.

A closer look at the coverage:

A growing option

Nearly seven out of 10 people who enrolled in an individual Medicare Advantage plan with prescripti­on drug coverage for this year opted for no-premium plans, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation, a nonprofit that studies health care issues. That’s up from around five in 10 in 2015.

Kaiser also found that 98 percent of people eligible for Medicare had access to an Advantage plan with drug coverage that charged no premium.

For 2023, about 57 percent of Medicare Advantage plans will have no premium, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Knowing the catch

The plans charge no premium, but most people who qualify for Medicare will still pay a monthly cost for the program’s Part B, which covers doctor visits and other outpatient care. That usually comes out of Social Security checks and will total $164.90 next year.

Government funding helps insurers offer an array of Medicare Advantage plans with no premiums and extras like dental or vision care that are not covered in traditiona­l Medicare.

One key difference from traditiona­l Medicare:

These plans usually require patients to visit doctors, hospitals or pharmacies in a network. Some plans may not cover care received outside those networks.

What to consider

Before looking at a plan’s price, Melissa Brenner, a broker in Charlotte, North Carolina, recommends that shoppers check to see whether their doctors are in the network and how regular prescripti­ons would be covered.

Then they should look at coverage basics. That can include what sort of copays would come with a specialist visit or a hospital stay. They also should look at the annual out-of-pocket maximum.

Some of these payments might be higher with a plan that has no premium, so customers could lose any savings if they use the coverage frequently.

The federal Medicare.gov website lets visitors compare plan coverages, including for prescripti­ons.

The challenges

A plan that charges no premium may wind up being a bargain for someone who is relatively healthy. But it can be hard for shoppers to predict what specialist­s they may need to see or if they will want access to, say, an out-of-state cancer hospital in a given year.

“Older people tend to get sick and use services, so it’s a gamble,” said Tricia Neuman, a Kaiser Family Foundation Medicare expert.

Sometimes even routine expenses will stick out.

Deadlines

People will have from

Oct. 15 until Dec. 7 to pick a new plan or decide whether they want to keep the same coverage.

There’s generally a big rush to sign up at the end. Late shoppers can get locked out if they haven’t chosen a plan already.

People also can stick with traditiona­l Medicare and sign up for supplement­al coverage, which generally comes with a higher premium than an Advantage plan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States